That three-year, two-way contract is the NHL’s typical entry-level pact, which Slepyshev would automatically be be assigned, with the only question being the exact structure of performance and signing bonuses (as a third-round pick, nothing onerous should be expected).

Alexei Mikhnov

Way back when I was a teenage fan of the Oilers, the team drafted a big winger out of Russia. Alexei Mikhnov was the final first round pick of the Barry Fraser drafting era, No. 17 overall, and there was a lot to like about him. He was a massive (6’5″, 218 pounds today) power forward prospect and while his numbers never really got to where they ideally would have been he was that “big winger with skill” the Oilers have been searching out for the better part of two decades.

Every training camp, I remember wondering if he’d come over from Russia, and most years I’d be disappointed. One year he made the trip — just a brief visit, not to play — and the Oilers discovered that he had wretched eyesight and needed glasses.

It took better than half a decade before Mikhnov finally arrived in North America at the age of 24. He played 27 games for Pittsburgh’s farm team (putting up 18 points) and appeared in two contests at the NHL level. He didn’t stay the full season; he returned to the Russian Super League and hasn’t been back since.

It’s a bit of a horror story from a development perspective, and presumably the KHL for all its faults has improved the quality of assessment and development in Russia in the 15 years since Mikhnov was drafted. But it speaks to the need to get players over early, to teach them the North American game and get them into an entry-level position (an AHL job) while they’re still raw enough as players to accept an entry-level position.

The Russian Pipeline

One of the underrated things that Craig MacTavish did during his time as general manager was accept Russia as a legitimate source of NHL players. For years, the Oilers rarely made forays overseas — Mikhnov was a rare exception and did not inspire confidence — but under MacTavish’s watch the Oilers sought out European free agents playing in the KHL and drafted Russian skaters developing on the far side of the Atlantic.

It’s still early to judge the results, but the third-round selections of Bogdan Yakimov and Anton Slepyshev stack up well to those that preceded them. Edmonton had no picks in the third round in 2007 or 2008; here’s what they’ve done with those picks since 2009:

2009 (2): Troy Hesketh, Cameron Abney

2010 (1): Ryan Martindale

2011 (2): Samu Perhonen, Travis Ewanyk

2012 (2): Jujhar Khaira, Daniil Zharkov

2013 (2): Bogdan Yakimov, Anton Slepyshev

Zharkov didn’t work out, but he wasn’t a European hire; he was playing in the OHL when he was picked, dramatically reducing the risk of getting him to come overseas and increasing the number of scouts who saw him play live.

Yakimov and Slepyshev both look like players who might be able to make a difference. Yakimov is a physical specimen, a 6’5″, 232 pound pivot who scored pretty well as a 20-year-old AHL rookie. Slepyshev is a 6’2″ winger with good speed who scored 25 points in 58 games this year (his age 20 season), a total which based on past experience projects to ~30 points over a full 82-game NHL season. Both are likely to start next year in Bakersfield.

Edmonton has gone from a team that largely ignored Russia and had problems when it didn’t to a club that drafts players and gets them to North America quickly. We don’t know yet if they’ll be rewarded for the shift, but the results so far are encouraging, encouraging enough that Peter Chiarelli should probably continue down his predecessor’s path in this respect.

63 Comments |

Slepyshev was a very good player in junior days internationally with Russia , far more better and prospect than Yakimov was/is . Our Canada club had a heck of a time containing him , his grit , skill and speed . However it was evident at that time , that he had no/little desire to come to NHL , and thus was not drafted @ 18 . Oilers got him the following year hoping he would change his mind – which luckily he has . Staying longer in Russia in KHL , is tough to know if that has furthered his development to a level he might have had over here . He shows no sign of being a soft player – seems quite the opposite and tough to get the puck off him . That’s probably why he was projected originally to go in first round of draft the year before we took the chance to draft him . Perhaps a diamond in the rough due to circumstances ?

Our AHL lineup next year and depth has a star studded lineup this team should dominate with brossoit in net as well as the possibility of nurse, draisaitl, slepyshev, yakimov ,pakarainen, roy, laleggia. Those are just our young prospects as well with other veteran AHL players waiting for call ups. Finally getting depth in this organization.

So looking forward to the “Red Army Line”. Was really hoping Shlepy would come over last year but glad he didn’t(Eakins would have sh^t on his parade as he did with Yak). Even if it’s for only 1 game, they have to have the chance to stick it to the either the Cansucks or the fLamers,